Cargando…

Dislocation of total hip replacement in patients with fractures of the femoral neck: A prospective cohort study of 713 consecutive hips

Background Total hip replacement is increasingly used in active, relatively healthy elderly patients with fractures of the femoral neck. Dislocation of the prosthesis is a severe complication, and there is still controversy regarding the optimal surgical approach and its influence on stability. We a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Enocson, Anders, Hedbeck, Carl-Johan, Tidermark, Jan, Pettersson, Hans, Ponzer, Sari, Lapidus, Lasse J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Informa Healthcare 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2823165/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19404800
http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/17453670902930024
_version_ 1782177607934017536
author Enocson, Anders
Hedbeck, Carl-Johan
Tidermark, Jan
Pettersson, Hans
Ponzer, Sari
Lapidus, Lasse J
author_facet Enocson, Anders
Hedbeck, Carl-Johan
Tidermark, Jan
Pettersson, Hans
Ponzer, Sari
Lapidus, Lasse J
author_sort Enocson, Anders
collection PubMed
description Background Total hip replacement is increasingly used in active, relatively healthy elderly patients with fractures of the femoral neck. Dislocation of the prosthesis is a severe complication, and there is still controversy regarding the optimal surgical approach and its influence on stability. We analyzed factors influencing the stability of the total hip replacement, paying special attention to the surgical approach. Patients and methods We included 713 consecutive hips in a series of 698 patients (573 females) who had undergone a primary total hip replacement (n = 311) for a non-pathological, displaced femoral neck fracture (Garden III or IV) or a secondary total hip replacement (n = 402) due to a fracture-healing complication after a femoral neck fracture. We used Cox regression to evaluate factors associated with prosthetic dislocation after the operation. Age, sex, indication for surgery, the surgeon’s experience, femoral head size, and surgical approach were tested as independent factors in the model. Results The overall dislocation rate was 6%. The anterolateral surgical approach was associated with a lower risk of dislocation than the posterolateral approach with or without posterior repair (2%, 12%, and 14%, respectively (p < 0.001)). The posterolateral approach was the only factor associated with a significantly increased risk of dislocation, with a hazards ratio (HR) of 6 (2–14) for the posterolateral approach with posterior repair and of 6 (2–16) without posterior repair. Interpretation In order to minimize the risk of dislocation, we recommend the use of the anterolateral approach for total hip replacement in patients with femoral neck fractures.
format Text
id pubmed-2823165
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher Informa Healthcare
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-28231652010-02-18 Dislocation of total hip replacement in patients with fractures of the femoral neck: A prospective cohort study of 713 consecutive hips Enocson, Anders Hedbeck, Carl-Johan Tidermark, Jan Pettersson, Hans Ponzer, Sari Lapidus, Lasse J Acta Orthop Research Article Background Total hip replacement is increasingly used in active, relatively healthy elderly patients with fractures of the femoral neck. Dislocation of the prosthesis is a severe complication, and there is still controversy regarding the optimal surgical approach and its influence on stability. We analyzed factors influencing the stability of the total hip replacement, paying special attention to the surgical approach. Patients and methods We included 713 consecutive hips in a series of 698 patients (573 females) who had undergone a primary total hip replacement (n = 311) for a non-pathological, displaced femoral neck fracture (Garden III or IV) or a secondary total hip replacement (n = 402) due to a fracture-healing complication after a femoral neck fracture. We used Cox regression to evaluate factors associated with prosthetic dislocation after the operation. Age, sex, indication for surgery, the surgeon’s experience, femoral head size, and surgical approach were tested as independent factors in the model. Results The overall dislocation rate was 6%. The anterolateral surgical approach was associated with a lower risk of dislocation than the posterolateral approach with or without posterior repair (2%, 12%, and 14%, respectively (p < 0.001)). The posterolateral approach was the only factor associated with a significantly increased risk of dislocation, with a hazards ratio (HR) of 6 (2–14) for the posterolateral approach with posterior repair and of 6 (2–16) without posterior repair. Interpretation In order to minimize the risk of dislocation, we recommend the use of the anterolateral approach for total hip replacement in patients with femoral neck fractures. Informa Healthcare 2009-04-29 2009-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2823165/ /pubmed/19404800 http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/17453670902930024 Text en Copyright: © Nordic Orthopedic Federation http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the source is credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Enocson, Anders
Hedbeck, Carl-Johan
Tidermark, Jan
Pettersson, Hans
Ponzer, Sari
Lapidus, Lasse J
Dislocation of total hip replacement in patients with fractures of the femoral neck: A prospective cohort study of 713 consecutive hips
title Dislocation of total hip replacement in patients with fractures of the femoral neck: A prospective cohort study of 713 consecutive hips
title_full Dislocation of total hip replacement in patients with fractures of the femoral neck: A prospective cohort study of 713 consecutive hips
title_fullStr Dislocation of total hip replacement in patients with fractures of the femoral neck: A prospective cohort study of 713 consecutive hips
title_full_unstemmed Dislocation of total hip replacement in patients with fractures of the femoral neck: A prospective cohort study of 713 consecutive hips
title_short Dislocation of total hip replacement in patients with fractures of the femoral neck: A prospective cohort study of 713 consecutive hips
title_sort dislocation of total hip replacement in patients with fractures of the femoral neck: a prospective cohort study of 713 consecutive hips
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2823165/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19404800
http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/17453670902930024
work_keys_str_mv AT enocsonanders dislocationoftotalhipreplacementinpatientswithfracturesofthefemoralneckaprospectivecohortstudyof713consecutivehips
AT hedbeckcarljohan dislocationoftotalhipreplacementinpatientswithfracturesofthefemoralneckaprospectivecohortstudyof713consecutivehips
AT tidermarkjan dislocationoftotalhipreplacementinpatientswithfracturesofthefemoralneckaprospectivecohortstudyof713consecutivehips
AT petterssonhans dislocationoftotalhipreplacementinpatientswithfracturesofthefemoralneckaprospectivecohortstudyof713consecutivehips
AT ponzersari dislocationoftotalhipreplacementinpatientswithfracturesofthefemoralneckaprospectivecohortstudyof713consecutivehips
AT lapiduslassej dislocationoftotalhipreplacementinpatientswithfracturesofthefemoralneckaprospectivecohortstudyof713consecutivehips